APPROVING 50 NEVENS STREET

The City Planning Commission approved the expansion of a mental health
treatment facility to include low-income affordable units for individuals
and families. On July 26, 2017, the City Planning Commission issued a favorable report
on an application for multiple land use actions to facilitate the enlargement
and reconstruction of an existing eight-story building by integrating
a 10-story horizontal expansion onto an abutting parking lot and three-story
addition to the northern portion of the existing building. The applicants,
the Institute for Community Living, proposed a zoning map and zoning text
amendment at the site, located on the southwest corner of the intersection
of Nevins Street and Schermerhorn Street in the Downtown Brooklyn neighborhood.

In 1986, the Institute appropriated the building to establish its “Stepping
Stone Treatment Residence” for single adults with serious mental
illness. Currently, residents live in 120 square foot rooms with shared
bathrooms. A dining program that includes three meals per a day is offered
on the eighth floor, and supportive services are located on the ground floor.

The approved rezoning would allow the Institute to renovate and enlarge
the 150 single unit, eight-story building into an upgraded and modernized
building containing 128 supportive housing units with studio, two-bedroom
and three-bedroom apartments. Sixty percent of the units would serve disabled
individuals and 40 percent would be slotted for low-income single adults
as well as families. The ground floor along Schermerhorn would contain
4,100 square feet of retail space.

On May 15, 2017, Brooklyn Community Board 2 voted 33-1 to approve the project.
On June 14, 2017, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams
issued a recommendation to approve the project with conditions. The Borough President requested
that the Institute provide a written commitment to the City Council that:
(1) it would actively solicit cultural organization as potential building
occupants within the retail space; (2) it would continue to explore additional
resiliency and sustainability measures; and, (3) it would retain Brooklyn-based
contractors to meet and exceed the 20 percent local requirement.

At the June 21st hearing, Caroline Harris, of GoldmanHarris LLC, presented
the project to the Commission on behalf of the Institute for Community
Living. Harris emphasized that this model of integrating the mentally
ill or disabled with general population is a state of the art approach
of working with persons who have mental disabilities. Harris also stated
the Institute’s commitment to meet the Borough President’s requests.

Responding to a question about relocation services for current tenants
from Commissioner Anna Hayes Levin, the Institute’s Chief Operation
Officer Chris Copeland explained that residents would be relocated to
multiple other sites controlled by the Institute to continue care. The
building would be completely emptied during construction, but Copeland
assured the Commission that none of the 150 residents would be left without
options or become homeless as a result of the project.

Inits report, the Planning Commission found the application to be appropriate. The
Commission noted that the development site is proximate to mass transit
and high density, community facility, residential and commercial uses.
The report also stated that the applicant had committed to developing
100 percent affordable units with 61 percent supportive—77 units
at an average of 50 percent of the area median income—and 39 percent
affordable housing—51 units at an average of 55 percent of the area
median income. The Commission also stated its appreciation for the applicant’s
“thorough relocation plan that would guarantee that all of the 150
current residents will be relocated to safe and appropriate housing opportunities.”